India, Pakistan and South Asia were called Cargill War in 1999, although they had nuclear weapons. The fundamental cause of the Kargil war dating back to the 1980s when Pakistan began acquiring nuclear capabilities, the leaders of Pakistan were dissatisfied with the division of the Kashmirians. Pakistan commenced three wars in 1948 and 1965, but in 1971 it proved that it no longer faces India and does not endanger catastrophic failures. Pakistan's nuclear capability allows Pakistan to challenge the boundaries of Kashmir's territory without fear of India's tragic reprisals.
In the second year, fears were raised concerning nuclear war in South Asia, intimidated by escalating Kashmir extremist Kargil war backed by Pakistan to a full-scale war. After being internationally criticized, the Atlantic incident occurred after the Cargill war was a bad crossroads for Prime Minister Shafi, and he no longer gained wide public support from his government. On October 12, 1999, after the military leader refused to accept the appointment of the liaison officer Ziauddin Butt, director of the ISI, Prime Minister Sharif decided to dismantle General Pervez Musharraf as military chief executive officer and chief commander I attempted. Sharif ordered the blockade of the Jinna International Airport, blocked the landing of the PIA flight carrying general Musharraf, and then hovered over Karachi for several hours. The anti-coup d'etat started, the military leader's senior commander banished Sharif government and took over the airport.
This problem expanded from the late 1940s to the early 1950s. India and Pakistan seem to be fighting a second war in the first three years after independence. In this important moment in the history of South Asia, Prime Minister Liakat Ali Khan of Pakistan announced a statement highlighting the need to find a solution to the problem. He also suggested gathering with his Indian counterpart to decide how to end the community's riots and fear of war. The two Prime Ministers met at Delhi on April 2, 1950 and discussed the problem in detail. The meeting lasted six days. On April 8, the two leaders signed an agreement later called Liaquat-Nehru Agreement. This agreement provides "rights bill" to ethnic minorities in India and Pakistan. The aim is to solve the following three problems.